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2. Connecticut 1798 House of Representatives, New London, Second Representative
3. Connecticut 1798 House of Representatives, New London, Second Representative, Ballot 2
4. Connecticut 1799 House of Representatives, Litchfield
5. Connecticut 1801 House of Representatives, New London
6. Connecticut 1802 House of Representatives, Hartford
7. Connecticut 1802 House of Representatives, Hartford
8. Connecticut 1802 House of Representatives, Litchfield
9. Connecticut 1802 House of Representatives, Litchfield
10. Connecticut 1802 House of Representatives, Litchfield
11. Connecticut 1802 House of Representatives, Norwalk
12. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, Danbury
13. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, Hartford
14. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, Hartford
15. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, Hartford, First Representative
16. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, Hartford, Second Representative
17. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, Litchfield
18. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, Litchfield
19. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, New Haven, First Representative
20. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, New Haven, First Representative
21. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, New Haven, Second Representative
22. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, New Haven, Second Representative
23. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, Saybrook
24. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, Saybrook, First Representative
25. Connecticut 1803 House of Representatives, Saybrook, Second Representative
26. Connecticut 1804 House of Representatives, Danbury
27. Connecticut 1804 House of Representatives, Danbury
28. Connecticut 1804 House of Representatives, Danbury
29. Connecticut 1804 House of Representatives, Danbury
30. Connecticut 1804 House of Representatives, Danbury, Ballot 2
31. Connecticut 1804 House of Representatives, Danbury, Ballot 3
32. Connecticut 1804 House of Representatives, Fairfield
33. Connecticut 1804 House of Representatives, Fairfield
34. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, Danbury, First Representative
35. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, Danbury, First Representative
36. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, Danbury, Second Representative
37. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, Danbury, Second Representative, First Ballot
38. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, Danbury, Second Representative, Second Ballot
39. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, Danbury, Second Representative, Third Ballot
40. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, Litchfield
41. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, Litchfield
42. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, New London
43. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, New London
44. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, New London, Ballot 2
45. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, New London, Ballot 2
46. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, New London, Ballot 3
47. Connecticut 1805 House of Representatives, Saybrook
48. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Danbury, First Representative
49. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Danbury, First Representative
50. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Danbury, First Representative, Ballot 2
51. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Danbury, Second Representative
52. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Danbury, Second Representative
53. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Danbury, Second Representative, Second Ballot
54. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Danbury, Second Representative, Third Ballot
55. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Litchfield
56. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Litchfield
57. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Litchfield, First Representative
58. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Litchfield, Second Representative
59. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Newtown, First Representative
60. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Newtown, Second Representative
61. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Simsbury
62. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Simsbury, Ballot 2
63. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Simsbury, Ballot 3
64. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Simsbury, Ballot 4
65. Connecticut 1806 House of Representatives, Simsbury, Ballot 5
66. Connecticut 1807 House of Representatives, Colebrook, Ballot 3
67. Connecticut 1807 House of Representatives, Colebrook, Ballot 3
68. Connecticut 1807 House of Representatives, Litchfield
69. Connecticut 1807 House of Representatives, Litchfield
70. Connecticut 1807 House of Representatives, Middletown
71. Connecticut 1807 House of Representatives, Middletown
72. Connecticut 1808 House of Representatives, Ashford
73. Connecticut 1808 House of Representatives, Danbury, First Representative
74. Connecticut 1808 House of Representatives, Danbury, Second Representative
75. Connecticut 1808 House of Representatives, Hartford
76. Connecticut 1808 House of Representatives, New London
77. Connecticut 1808 House of Representatives, New London
78. Connecticut 1808 House of Representatives, New Milford
79. Connecticut 1811 House of Representatives, Windham
80. Connecticut 1811 House of Representatives, Windham
81. Connecticut 1812 House of Representatives, Windham
82. Connecticut 1812 House of Representatives, Windham
83. Connecticut 1813 House of Representatives, Norwich
84. Connecticut 1813 House of Representatives, Norwich
85. Connecticut 1814 House of Representatives, Danbury
86. Connecticut 1814 House of Representatives, Danbury
87. Connecticut 1816 House of Representatives, Danbury, First Representative
88. Connecticut 1816 House of Representatives, Danbury, Second Representative
89. Connecticut 1816 House of Representatives, Hartford
90. Connecticut 1816 House of Representatives, Hartford
91. Connecticut 1816 House of Representatives, New Haven
92. Connecticut 1816 House of Representatives, New Haven
93. Connecticut 1816 House of Representatives, New Haven, Second Representative
94. Connecticut 1816 House of Representatives, New Haven, Second Representative, Ballot 2
95. Connecticut 1816 House of Representatives, New Haven, Second Representative, Ballot 3
96. Connecticut 1817 House of Representatives, Hartford
97. Connecticut 1817 House of Representatives, New Haven
98. Connecticut 1817 House of Representatives, New Haven
99. Connecticut 1817 House of Representatives, New Haven
100. Connecticut 1817 House of Representatives, New Haven, Ballot 2
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As one of the original thirteen colonies, Connecticut holds a unique place in the history of democratic government in what became the United States of America. The Puritan Congregationalists who settled New England were well known for their town meetings and representative government. The Fundamental Orders, which formed the first written system of government in Connecticut, were formulated in 1639 by representatives from the towns of Hartford, Wethersfield, and Windsor. The Orders provided for the creation of a single legislative body known as the General Assembly and outlined the process for the election of magistrates. Of those magistrates, one was elected to serve for a single year as a fairly weak governor, and serving consecutive terms was prohibited. All freemen within the colony had the right to vote in these elections, and paper ballots were used in town meetings to determine the outcome. The Reverend Thomas Hooker presaged the representative nature of the Fundamental Orders by preaching a sermon in which he noted that "the foundation of authority is laid in the free consent of the people." The Fundamental Orders are the reason why Connecticut is known today as the Constitution State.
The Fundamental Orders were replaced by the colonial charter of 1662; that charter continued to follow the essential character of the Orders. After the Revolution, only Connecticut and Rhode Island continued to operate under their colonial charters. Until a formal state constitution was created in 1818, Connecticut government operated on the basis of the Fundamental Orders. Some things did, however, change in the years during which the charter was in operation. In 1698 the General Assembly was divided into two houses and was composed of 200 representatives, one or two from each of the towns. Elections were held semi-annually in the April and September freemen’s meetings. Any freeman could run for office.
Even though the state government was seemingly democratic in nature, the aristocracy controlled most matters. The colonial charter had created a council of twelve assistants, which served as the upper house of the Assembly, and it retained tight control over governmental matters. As historians have noted, "Its supremacy derived from the continuity of its members in office and the veto they exercised over most of the General Assembly's actions."
Historian Richard Purcell notes that from 1775 to 1818, Connecticut was a state in transition: "The result was the bloodless Revolution of 1818, which gave the state a constitution as democratic as any then in existence." In the midst of these years, the nation witnessed not only a new system of government, with the ratification of the U.S. Constitution in 1789, but also the rise of a fierce two-party system of Federalists and Republicans, who did battle over what they perceived to by the proper political and economic direction of government. Connecticut became a staunchly Federalist state. Until 1819, every senator and congressman sent to the national Congress belonged to the Federalist Party, and until 1818, every seat in the upper house of the Connecticut Assembly was Federalist. It was not until 1817, with the election of Oliver Wolcott, Jr., that a Republican managed to take control of the governor's office.
The Federalist Party was marked by the more traditional notion of deferential, and aristocratic, beliefs in government. It was assumed that only men of higher standing were fit for office and should control the affairs of government. Federalists feared the "mob" of democracy, which they associated with the rise of Jefferson's Republican Party. Federalists were so firmly entrenched within Connecticut that it was particularly difficult for the Jeffersonians to work their way into the state. Yearly elections took place, but the nominating system was skillfully controlled by the Federalists, who possessed an almost machine-like domination. By 1801 they had passed a "stand up" law, which replaced the written ballots cast in the freemen's meetings with a requirement to raise one's hand or stand up to show a vote. Like other forms of voice voting, this effectively stymied opposition by engendering fear of retribution.
Even as the Republican Party continued to grow and spread throughout the South and Middle Atlantic region, New England—and Connecticut along with it remained almost exclusively Federalist. By 1800, with Jefferson taking over in what many termed a revolution, Federalists clung to power and fought any reforms that might allow broader democracy, and with it the Republican Party, into the state. Still, murmurings continued to grow over the inequity of taxes, the unfair apportionment of seats in the state government, certain election laws, and legislation that favored the Congregational Church, which was supported by tax money. The murmurings grew to open revolt by the second decade of the 1800s, in part because of the Federalist opposition to the War of 1812 and because of the infamous Hartford Convention. The result was the new constitution of 1818. This was the very wedge needed to allow the Democratic-Republicans to compete in the state. Even with that party's entrance, however, the going was slow. The state continued to exhibit its generally more aristocratic leanings and was decidedly against the election of Andrew Jackson to the presidency in 1824 and 1828. Even though Gideon Wells had by 1820 established a nascent Democratic Party in Connecticut, Jackson's party and administration did little to attract votes in Connecticut, or in New England more broadly. The Democratic Party viewed Connecticut as populated by opponents and as falling far more in line with the newly developed Whig Party. Indeed, it was not until the mid-1830s to 1840s, well into the evolution of the second American party system, that Democrats managed to compete with Whigs within the state.
Bibliography
- Buell, Richard, Jr. and George J. Willauer.
Original Discontents: Commentaries on the Creation of Connecticut's Constitution of 1818. Hamden, CT: The Acorn Club, 2007. - Morse, Jarvis Means.
A Neglected Period of Connecticut's History, 1818–1850. New York: Octagon Books, 1978 - Purcell, Richard J.
Connecticut in Transition: 1775–1818. Middletown: Wesleyan University Press, 1963.
House of Representatives
House of Representatives: the lower or popular house of the United States Congress or of a State legislature. The name of the lower house in all states prior to 1825 except for Maryland and Virginia, (House of Delegates), New Jersey and New York (Assembly) and North Carolina (House of Commons).
Oxford English Dictionary
1787 - 1825: Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont
Office Scope: State
Role Scope: County / District / Town(ship) / Parish